There are so many of these--Citibank, eBay, PayPal, etc. The best rule is this: don't ever offer your information based on an unsolicited request. Some of these phishers have gotten so good that in some surveys, people thought the fake site was the real site and the real site the fake! I would include telephone requests as well.

I always forward them to the provider at spoof or abuse @ provider.com. For instance, to report a phishing email from paypal, I forward the email to spoof@paypal.com. It helps them shut the Ba$tard$ down.

I don't think paypal or ebay ever does anything with these forwarded spoof e-mails. I've had as many as a dozen different spoof e-mails from the same fraudster trying to get me to send that John Deere tractor they already paid for.

There is also another Amazon scam to beware of. I sell stuff on amazon on occasion. recently I was selling an expensive fuji digital camera. I received an fake email from amazon telling me the camera was sold and please ship it now.

I didnt fall for it because I am pretty leery of such things. However I did have an email conversation with one guy who did fall for it and shipped his camera. He did manage to get the postal service to catch the package out of state and return it to him. however, if the postal service had missed it, he would be out around $325.00...ouch!